A visit with Marik Berghs

NewCoverGN-AmazonWhat genre(s) do you write in and why?

I write fantasy for YA, because as Tamara Pierce said it is the only genre where you can use the words honor and integrity and not have to qualify them. I thought about that a lot and have come to agree. Humans have always been hungry for the white knights, the super heroes and heroines, the larger than life beings that represent the best of who we can be. Mythology and folklore are the archives for these types of stories and now we flock to see the stories and the heroes and heroines in movies or in comic books. I want to write about characters that every reader wants to be.

Tell us about your current series.

The series that I’m writing now is fantasy set in a contemporary realistic place (southern Illinois, northern Kentucky and Tennessee). In essence the books are the stories of four young people of different cultures that have often been at war. I wanted to know how the characters could find their way around all that history in order to save their lives and their homes. The girls are human and the males are Fae, it just happened to work that way though there are many Fae females and human males in the series too. The heroine is mouthy, vulnerable, loyal to a fault and funny. She is seventeen when the series begins and has a secret she can’t afford to let anyone know.

What inspired your latest book?

I started writing the series over 12 years ago when my granddaughter suggested that we write a book together. These storyline has evolved but the heroine is still named the name that Hannah suggested—Lunabel. Over the years as new characters presented themselves it just seemed natural to tell their stories. I like the fact that they are undergoing the same events but their filters color their experiences so they each see things differently. I’m fascinated by that in real life: seeing how people perceive the same things in different ways. I wanted to give this girl a superpower, unlike any I’d ever read about and so I did. She can make sound. We are just finding out how powerful sound can be so I have a lot of research I can work with as well as my imagination.

Do you prefer to read in the same genres you write in or do you avoid reading that genre? Why?

I am an eclectic reader but usually don’t read in my genre. I become impatient if the world building is sloppy, or doesn’t hold up, or the characters are flat. I would rather read other genres where I am not as easily disappointed. That said there are some fantasy writers where I will read anything they write. Tamora Pierce, Julian Mays, Neil Gaiman, love them.

Describe the genre of this particular title, and is the only genre you write in?

The books in the Sanctuary series are fantasy but I write in other genres too. I am working on two other series, one is a contemporary mystery series and the other an historical mystery series.

How has your experience with self-publishing been?

I grew up in traditional publishing. My dad owned a small newspaper, so the process of producing written materials was a part of my upbringing.  Indie publishing just seemed like an organic step for autonomy. I had worked with small presses and had a short stories and articles published through traditional venues but I wanted more control over my product than even a small press offered. Control and traditional publishing don’t work in the same context. They really are two separate beasts and I’m not suited to the traditional process, where as, I speak self-pub as a second language. This works for me because I knew all the steps that were needed to translate a manuscript into a book. I also know the process of bringing the book to market. Thanks to the online distributers it really is possible to take control of your intellectual property and go with it.

What advice do you have for other authors wanting to self-publish?

Don’t expect a simple process and learn about the whole industry before you commit yourself. Especially know the difference between Indie publishing and Vanity Presses. It is inexpensive to publish your own book but it isn’t free. Join groups that focus on self-publishing, belong to a professional writer’s organization and attend talks that other writers are giving so that you can ask questions.

Tell us about your hero. 

Jeremy, you mean other than he can read the future, do magic and is really a 400 year-old El’Vanin? Those are the extraordinary things about him but the more natural, or human side of him is the most interesting to me. He is honorable, compassionate, loyal and has a great sense of humor. He finds every thing that Lunabel does delightful. His weakness would be his tendency to be too honorable. And yes there are times he needs to be more flexible in his interpretation of the world and events. That being said, I love his sense of honor.

Tell us about your heroine.  Give us one of her strengths and one of her weaknesses

Lunabel is a good friend. She is fiercely loyal and honest, with a soft heart and lots more courage than good sense. She loves to read and hang out in the forest. Boys were never an interest for her until she meets Jeremy and then against her naturally skeptical self she is drawn to him.

Her weakness is that she doesn’t have confidence in herself. She has to learn that people won’t reject her if they know her secrets. And she has a huge secret.

Something for readers.

Readers should know that they are part of an artistic equation. When a writer writes they use a piece of creative spirit. That is enough for some writers but for me what makes my writing important is connecting with a reader. I pay close attention to what they say and am lucky to have people willing to read my work for critiquing and other people who read my work for review. Reviews are the pay off, that is when you hear what your readers find in your words. If you have enjoyed a book, leave a review, even just a few words means a lot.

EXCERPT From The Fae Wars – Grace Notes

I was three-years-old when I shattered all the glass in our living room. I remember sitting on the floor in the late afternoon sun, watching the dancing motes of light. I hummed and the specks spun and moved in patterns. Throwing up my arms, I danced and hummed and sang. Then I was fascinated with the way things rattled in concert with my sounds. When my grandmother’s metal plates thumped lightly against the walls, my five-year-old sister Myra got nervous.

“Stop it, Lunabel!” she’d shouted.

Too late! I was experimenting with variations of volume and pitch. I could make the windows buzz and the dining room chairs thrum.

Mom hurtled into the room, tripping over a low table. Unable to catch her footing, she smashed into the table corner and fell.

“George, she’s doing it again,” she moaned, rubbing her knees before she climbed upright again. Dad swooped in. He rescued a porcelain vase that had wobbled towards the edge of the bookcase.

By then Mom had limped over and picked me up. She held me away from her body like a leaky bag of garbage. “She’s vibrating, I can feel it through her bones.”

Dad lifted me from Mom’s arms and held me against his chest.

“Music!” Caught up in my game, I looked out the French doors in the living room and shrieked. Every pane of glass in the doors splintered, making its own tinkling noise.

“Mama, Mama, Mama,” Myra screamed. Her noise startled me and then I screamed. Light bulbs popped, the living room went dark and the explosion of leaded glass and double-paned windows caused Dad to spin around shielding me with his back. My crying forced the breath from my lungs. This scared me even more. I gasped, recovered and was winding up to resume my outrage.

Dad began to sing, softly.

“Sing a song of sixpence, pocket full of rye . . .”

Worn out, my cries subsided, replaced by dry sobs.

“Softly, princess,” Dad said, as he carried me upstairs to the rocking chair in my room.

“We need to let the house rest, sweetie.”

Mom followed us. Her eyes were narrowed and her lips stretched across her teeth.

“George, what are we going to do with her? She’s a freak,” she said. “There is no medical explanation for this.” Her voice was tight and harsh against my ears, like an arctic wind.

Mom would have known, she was a medical doctor.

Now I understand that my mother was horrified and afraid and more than a little overwhelmed. By unspoken family agreement, the episode was locked in a vault of shame. I remember exactly what everyone said that night. Not only can I make sounds that resonate with the things around me, I also have absolute echoic memory. This means I remember every sound, every nuance of sound, and I can reproduce it exactly every time.

I remember the tone of my mother’s voice when she told Dad I was a freak. I knew Mom was afraid. I knew.

I hear what people mean when they speak. I hear the words. I remember pitch. But most importantly, I hear the emotions hidden between their words.

Sound is a language of many levels.

  • The Fae Wars – Grace Notes
  • Print Length: 375 pages

Buy at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Fae-Wars-Grace-Notes-Sanctuary-ebook/dp/B00DFOTHJI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1470960693&sr=8-1&keywords=the+fae+wars

BLURB

Lunabel has a secret she doesn’t want anyone to know. Jeremy Fields, needs to know it. What happens next is magic. The small town of Thornhill, Illinois, exists at the edge of an ancient forest where the last of the Fae nations have created their Sanctuary. In this fantasy series of blending cultures, and the shifting realities between things that are known and not yet known, trust must persevere despite taboos and fears of betrayal. And life and love must find a way…

Strong female characters, amazing magical creatures, a smattering of real science that is stranger than fiction and is cleverly disguised as magic.

Longerhair copyAUTHOR INFO

Marik Berghs has been writing since the first time she noticed invisible horses. First she drew them and then she wrote about them. In the intervening years she has branched out to include other creatures and some humans in her stories. She lives in the San Francisco Bay area where magical thinking sometimes passes for reality.

 

 

One Ghost-Investigating Agency, Eight Different Stories by Erin Hayes

TGTBTGFInalCoverSmallThe Good, The Bad, and The Ghostly is a collection of eight ghostly romances from the Wild West that are all tied together by one fictional ghost-investigating agency in St. Louis—The Tremayne Specters Investigations Agency.

Writing eight different stories that all featured the same place that existed in our imaginations presented some interesting challenges. Questions such as, “Where is this agency located?” or “What does it look like?” or even, “What do the people who work there look like?” popped up at various points, and we all had to make sure that they aligned with one another, otherwise, we wouldn’t have a believable world. And, on top of that, we set the anthology in the late 1800s, adding another layer of research and planning to our writing. It was challenging to say the least.

Yet, I think we somehow managed to pull it off. And I love the final result.

Discussions took place over Yahoo! Groups, and collaboration was key. We all first decided on a name for the agency—words such as paranormal didn’t exist during this time period, so we had to improvise with the words that were available. Thus, the Tremayne PSI Agency was born.

As mentioned earlier, there were questions about where this agency was based, and many other specifics, even down to the marble in the lobby of the agency’s office. Luckily, we had the foresight to define all of these and they were compiled into a document that we could refer to at any point during our story. It was actually so complete, that any time I had to refer to the document for my own contribution to the collection, I never went away with more questions. Everything was complete, meaning that we had done a great job world building.

World building is my favorite part of writing, so having such a rich history to draw from was inspiring, as I’m sure it was for the other authors. As we all went our own ways to write our stories, certain other aspects of publishing went into play such as cover art, promotion, organization, editing, formatting and so many others. We even had an internal beta read program where we swapped our finished stories with another author. As I generally write paranormal romance in a modern-day setting, I really relied on this part to make sure that my own story was believable in both the collection and in the 1880s.

Once the stories were completed, edited, and picked over with a fine-toothed comb, it was compiled and formatted into the collection that you can pick up from Amazon. Eight unique, wonderful stories that have their own distinct voices while maintaining that consistency across all of them. Each story is fun, and I hope you’ll enjoy reading them as much as we did building the world around it. Just be sure to read it with the lights on—some can get pretty spooky!

Erin Hayes Profile PhotoErin Hayes

Social Media Links:
https://www.facebook.com/erinhayesbooks/

www.erinhayesbooks.com

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5335865

Buy How the Ghost Was Won as part of The Good, The Bad, and The Ghostly here: https://www.amazon.com/Good-Bad-Ghostly-Western-Romance-ebook/dp/B01KKVK9BI/

Buy link:  http://mybook.to/GoodBadGhostly

THE BLURB FOR HOW THE GHOST WAS WON:

There are ghost stories. And there are ghost legends.

From orphan to saloon girl to ghost whisperer, Hattie Hart has been and seen a lot of things in her time. Her new job as a detective with the Tremayne Psychic Specters Investigations Agency takes her out to the remote town of Carolina City, Nevada, on a vague assignment to investigate the disappearance of a US Marshal.

Except, when she arrives, she meets the devilishly handsome Grant Madsen, a US Marshal who is alive and well. Certainly not missing, but certainly the man of her dreams. So why did her boss send her out to this small boomtown when there’s nothing for her to investigate?

She soon discovers that in Carolina City, there are strange happenings from the afterlife that threaten to kill her or worse. She’ll have to race against time to save her life, the town, and the US Marshal she was sent to find—and maybe, if she’s lucky, her heart.

EXCERPT:

In my dream, there’s a man.
I can’t see his face or any other distinguishing features on him other than the fact that he is tall and dark, and I can sense that he is handsome. My dreams don’t allow for me to get close enough to see who he is.
But I know him. He has captivated my heart and welded my soul to his. Something inside me intrinsically calls out to him, aching that he’s not close to me, skin to skin, pulse against pulse.
We’re meant to be together, in this life and in others.
I know this, and he knows this.
In my dream, we’re standing about ten yards apart on a desert landscape, me in my corset and him in his dust jacket and hat that shades his face. I don’t recognize the place, but it feels alien, like nothing could ever survive in these harsh elements.
We’re both dead.
I see the glint of his smile as he looks at me. My heart breaks and I want to help him, but something keeps me rooted to my spot.
“Find me, Hattie,” he says, his voice in my head. “Save me.”
“How?” I ask. “From what?”
But he keeps repeating those two words, echoing on and on in my mind.
“Save me. Save me.”

 

What do you get when you mix cowboys with ghosts? A collection of eight (stand-alone) amazing stories from the Old West with haunts of every variety.

Get your love of alpha cowboys on and feed your addiction for the bizarre (and sometimes spooky) world when you download The Good, The Bad and The Ghostly.

Bestselling and Award-winning authors are pleased to save you more than 75% on this fantastic boxed set! (Price if books sold separately)

* * *

Wild, Wild Ghost by Margo Bond Collins

With everyone she loves in the grave, Ruby specializes in the dead.

 Comes An Outlaw by Keta Diablo

An outlaw returns to his childhood home to find his parents and brother dead, and the lovely widow in grave danger.

 Long A Ghost, and Far Away by Andrea Downing

Ghosts are restless souls, and Lizzie Adams is one of them.  How many lives will she get to find the perfect love?

 A Ghostly Wager by Blaire Edens

Even a skeptical detective needs a little otherworldly help.

How the Ghost Was Won by Erin Hayes

There are ghost stories. And there are ghost legends.

McKee’s Ghost by Anita Philmar

The ghost living in his house might have saved him from an unhappy marriage and brought him the girl of his dreams but when his ex- fiancé returns, the same spirit turns his life upside down.

A Ride Through Time by Charlene Raddon

P.S.I. Agent Burke Jameson wants to find out if Eagle Gulch, Colorado has genuine ghosts. But he found far more than he expected, including a horse ride that could change his life forever

The Ghost and the Bridegroom by Patti Sherry-Crews

She’s sent west to solve a case. What she finds will change her forever.

 

 

 

An Interview with Trevann Rogers

HouseOfTheRisingSon72smGive us an elevator pitch for your book.

An incubus and two toddlers walk into a bar…wait. That’s no joke. That’s Cheyenne’s life, and you weren’t supposed to see them.

Cheyenne, a half-human incubus, is good at keeping secrets. He keeps his music career hidden from his tyrannical father. He keeps his true nature as an incubus secret from the humans whose lust sustains him. And he keeps his children unknown to the incubi, especially the royal family—his family. He doesn’t buy into the “they could save the race” bullshit. He’s just got to keep them safe. Besides he’s got bigger plans—he’s going to be a rockstar.

 Describe the genre of this particular title, and is the only genre you write in?

HOUSE OF THE RISING SON is an LGBT Urban Fantasy Romance.  LGBT indicates that the main characters are gay, lesbian or transgender and that their sexuality is an integral part of their story. The stories are Urban Fantasy in that the story is set in a modern world peopled with supernatural creatures.  Urban Fantasies also typically have aggressive conflict and action.

Do you prefer to read in the same genres you write in or do you avoid reading that genre? Why? I almost exclusively read Urban Fantasy with male protagonists. I love the pace of these novels, and I enjoy the male point of view and humor. Not that I don’t also enjoy great books with female protagonists. But the books I like best, I like because I fall in love with the hero.

Tell us about your hero.  Give us one of his strengths and one of his weaknesses.

Cheyenne is an incubus who aspires to be a rock star. Besides playing the guitar like a fiend, one of his strengths is his capacity to love and remain loyal despite the odds.  On the other hand, he doesn’t let many people get close to him. He’s guarded and secretive even when it’s not in his best interest.

Where do you get the ideas for your stories?

Ah, I find inspiration for stories from many sources. Most often, I’ll see someone with a look or a personality that sparks my imagination. Sometimes song lyric moves me. Occasionally my writing partner and I will start a silly conversation that takes an interesting turn and become a scene or a story.

Do you have critique partners?

I am lucky to belong to a wonderful group of women writers. We all write in very different genres—Women’s Fiction, Suspense, Mystery, Biographical Fiction—and me, Urban Fantasy. It works because our strengths are also different and complimentary. We share them freely while supporting and encouraging each other.

 Do you have a view in your writing space?  What does your space look like?

My view is of my beautiful back yard. It is filled with trees and flowers with places to sit and enjoy the outdoors.  It then slopes down to a tiny valley I chose not to landscape. It’s become my own personal wildlife sanctuary.

 Did you have several manuscripts finished before you sold? If so, did you send them out yourself?

No, believe it or not, the only manuscript I had was the manuscript I sold. I sent it out to various publishing companies, and pitched it in person at a few conferences.  Surprisingly, I received a few offers and chose the one that was the best fit.

 Having achieved your goal to be a published author, what is the most rewarding thing?   

HOUSE OF THE RISING SON is the book of my heart with characters I’ve played with and loved a long time. The fact that there are other people who love them too and enjoy my story makes my heart sing.

What is your next project and when will it be released?

AFTER MIDNIGHT is prequel to HOUSE OF THE RISING SON. It will be released on September 22. It answers some of the questions about the mothers of Cheyenne’s children.

Thank you so much for having me today!

House of the Rising Son

Living After Midnight, Book 1

Author: Trevann Rogers

Genre: Urban Fantasy Romance

Cheyenne is a half-human incubus whose star is on the rise in the Unakite City rock scene. His father, the leader of the supernatural races, would prefer he keep a “low profile”, but screw that. Cheyenne has as much music in his veins as royal incubi blood.

Alexander’s future is all set—finish law school, join the family firm, and marry someone who’d be good for business. Not that he has a say in any of it. He’s barely met the woman his father expects him to marry.

As Cheyenne’s musical career takes off, his carefully constructed life begins to unravel, exacerbated by an ex-lover who can’t let go, a crotchety barkeeper with a dirty mind and a pure heart, a drag queen who moonlights as a nanny, and Alexander—who’s not sure if he’s falling for the incubus or the rocker.

Cheyenne denies who he is, while Alexander hides what he wants. Together, they learn that getting what they truly want means being who they truly are.

Warning: Contains hot were-tiger sex, a Thanksgiving celebration that makes the Inquisition look like a tea party, and an incubus who’ll rock your world.

~~

Excerpt:

While waiting for their drinks, Alexander studied the deep grooves carved into the table, trying to ignore the friction of Cheyenne’s thigh rubbing against his as the musician tapped a heel to the thump of the DJ’s music. Once the drinks arrived, Alexander downed half the bottle before he realized Cheyenne’s large green eyes were staring at him.

“So where’s your girl, Prudhomme? I mean, Prune Danish. No, wait…”

“Prudish. Shit, Prudence,” Alexander sputtered.

Cheyenne’s eyes sparkled. “No, you got it right the first time. Where is she?”

He shrugged. “Home, I guess.”

Cheyenne cocked his head. “Oh, really?” He put his hand on Alexander’s leg. “What’s up? You can tell me.”

“It’s not working out.” Alexander dragged his teeth over his lower lip. “It’s my fault.” He couldn’t keep his attraction to Cheyenne out of his voice. “I don’t know what’s happening to me.”

Cheyenne put his thumb to his lip and paused. “It’s like the drink.”

Alexander tilted his head, not sure he heard correctly. “The drink?”

“Yeah, that nasty ass bourbon. I bet your father drinks it. Your uncles. All your friends. Everybody, right?”

He didn’t answer, but waited for Cheyenne to continue.

“It was just expected that you’d drink it too. So you did.” His hand moved up Alexander’s thigh. “But now, maybe it’s okay to drink what you like. A different brand, a better vintage. Because you want it. Because it tastes better.” Cheyenne licked his lips. “Because it feels right.”

Alexander cleared his throat and brushed his lap, pushing Cheyenne’s hand away. “I can’t.”

“If you change your mind, let me know.”

“You don’t understand. It’s not that easy. My whole life will change.”

“It already has.”

~~

You can find HOUSE OF THE RISING SON AT:

Samhain Publishing, Barnes and Noble and Amazon.

About Trevann

Trevann Rogers writes urban fantasy and LGBT paranormal romances. Her stories incorporate an unquenchable addiction to music and her love for vampires, Weres, incubi and rock stars. Like these elusive creatures, Trevann learned long ago that sometimes being yourself means Living After Midnight.

Find Trevann at:

www.trevannrogers.com

www.facebook.com/trevannr

www.twitter.com/trevannrogers

 

How To Write The Next Book By C.D. Hersh

Tweet-series-bannerAt some point, in the beginning of every writing journey, we authors wonder if we can really write a book. We ask ourselves:  Can I do this? And if I can, will I be able to write a second book? Will my next book be as good as the first book?  Will an editor love book number two as much as the first one? And, heaven forbid, what will I do if no wants the next book I write— assuming I can even finish it?

When we started our publishing journey back in 2012, with the pitch of the first book in our paranormal/urban fantasy series The Turning Stone Chronicles to Soul Mate Publishing, we had some of those questions. Book One, The Promised One was taking a maiden journey into the editorial world of queries. And after the rejection stories we heard from other aspiring authors, we truly thought we’d have our first rejection slip. We had ideas about where the remaining books in the proposed series were going, but not much more than nutshells of ideas and a few paragraphs written in a black-and-white school composition book. Book number one didn’t even have a contract, and here we were bold enough to assume we could write and sell a six-book series.

Four years later, with the release of book number four in the series, The Mercenary and the Shifters, we are now more than halfway through our series.

It’s been an interesting journey. We had a few surprises along the way. We never expected our series to sell on the first toss over the publishing world transom. And we certainly didn’t expect the editor would want all six books without ever seeing them. We also didn’t expect the overwhelming learning curve of marketing that came crashing down on us. But somehow, we figured it all out—including the total replotting of book 4 when a minor character in book 3, The Son of the Moonless Night, suddenly decided she wanted center stage and took over the plotting process. We also learned, thanks to a lovely review we received, that we can write without the dreaded sophomoric slump in our later books.

If you’re just beginning your publishing journey and you’ve answered “no” and “I don’t know to the questions in the opening paragraph, you are starting your journey off stifling your creativity. If you can finish a single book that has all the elements an editor wants, then never fear. You can write another book as good as the first and maybe even better.

MERCENARY AND THE SHIFTERS_505x825 (2)Here are some tips to help you make your goal of book number 2, 3, and more.

  • Keep a positive attitude. A lot of people want to write a book. Many say they’re going to write a book SOME DAY. You have written a book. You’ve slapped those all-important two words on the last page—THE END. Additionally, if you got a contract from an editor, you have validation that your book was good. So don’t let doubt get in your way.
  • Don’t wait until your creativity well runs dry to begin the next book. Writing stirs up our muses, and there’s no better time to start thinking about the next book than while you are working on your current book.
  • When you have an idea for the next book, let the need to write it spur you on. Having a second story waiting in the wings compels us to finish the WIP.
  • When you get that nutshell of an idea for book number two, write it down! Don’t say, “I can remember that.” Chances are you won’t. Instead, drop it in a computer file or paper file, whichever works for you. Read it often. Think about it before you go to bed, but not if it makes you an insomniac. Let it bubble and stew in the back of your mind until a full-blown story is born.
  • Capture ANY wild story ideas that come your way. No tidbit you find remotely interesting should be ignored. You never know when inspiration for the next book will hit. The plot could be residing in a snippet of conversation you overhear at your favorite restaurant, a story you read in the newspaper, or even an interesting road sign. The Turning Stone Chronicle series originated from a road sign for a place named Turning Stone that we passed on a long road trip. We said, “What an interesting town name. Could we write a story with that title?” And the rest is history.
  • Learn from your mistakes. Continued practice of the craft makes you a more skilled writer. Keeping a weasel word list, noting the places where your editor or beta readers say you are weak, and continuous education in the craft will improve your writing skill and storytelling ability. The more we write, the more second nature the job becomes. So, when the next book comes along, you’ll have an easier time putting it down. And who doesn’t want that?

For all the readers out there, here’s an excerpt from book four of The Turning Stone Chronicles. We hope you’ll like it.

The Mercenary and the Shifter

Excerpt

“My home is perfectly safe. It’s my business I’m concerned about.”

Fiona crossed her arms over her chest, her body language closing off to further suggestions. Mike followed her motions. As he did, he spotted a red dot on her chest. The dot wiggled.

“Get down!” Mike shouted as he dove for Fiona.

They hit the floor as the pottery on the raised fireplace hearth exploded, sending shards across the room. Mike shoved Fiona behind the nearest chair then scrambled across the rug to the blown-out window. Removing his gun from his back-of-the-waist holster, he peered over the windowsill. Seeing no one in the driveway, he swiveled around to check on Fiona. The red laser point danced around the room, searching for a target.

Mike followed the trajectory of the beam. The shot came from across the street in something high. He remembered seeing a tree house in the yard across the road from the mansion.

“Who lives across from you?” he asked.

“No one right now. The house is for sale.”

“I didn’t see a ‘For Sale’ sign.”

“We’re in an exclusive neighborhood. The HOA forbids sale signs.” Another shot rang out.

Mike whirled around in time to see Fiona’s head sticking out from behind the chair. The image of her head reflected in the fireplace mirror. “He’s using the mirror to target us. Do these curtains close?”

“Yes. The cord’s on the other side of the window.”

“I’m going to crawl under the window and close them. He’ll probably see my reflection in the mirror and start shooting, so stay hidden. As soon as the curtains close, crawl to the window as fast as you can and follow the wall to the entryway. Then get the hell out of the front of the house. Got it?”

“Got it.” Fiona’s voice quavered up the scale.

“You okay?”

“Scared, but okay.”

As Mike crawled along the floor, a volley of shots rang out. The remainder of the pottery displayed on the hearth shattered. When he reached the other side of the window, he yanked the drapery cord. The curtains billowed closed.

“Now, Fiona!” he shouted.

As she belly crawled across the floor, Mike held his breath. Bullets sprayed the room, punching through the heavy draperies, the shots veering from floor to ceiling.

Don’t ricochet! he commanded.

Fiona reached the cover of the exterior wall, and he let his breath out in a whoosh.

“Hurry!”

When she came within arm’s reach, he grabbed her hand and yanked her the rest of the way across the room and into the entry.

“Do you have a panic room?”

She nodded, her eyes filled with fear. “In the basement, behind the trophy wall.”

“Get in it, and don’t come out until I tell you to.”

“Where are you going?”

“To get the SOB who’s trying to kill you.”

Amazon buy links:

The Promised One (The Turning Stone Chronicles Book 1):

eBook: http://amzn.com/B00DUMODKI

paperback: http://amzn.com/1619353504

Blood Brothers (The Turning Stone Chronicles Book 2):

eBook: http://amzn.com/B00OVNFC8W

paperback: http://amzn.com/1619358271

Son of the Moonless Night (The Turning Stone Chronicles Book 3):

eBook: http://amzn.com/B00XK3E172

paperback: http://amzn.com/1682910709

The Mercenary and the Shifters (The Turning Stone Chronicles Book 4):

eBook: https://amzn.com/B01I01W2JC

 

hersh_smallC.D. Hersh–Two hearts creating everlasting love stories.

Putting words and stories on paper is second nature to co-authors C.D. Hersh. They’ve written separately since they were teenagers and discovered their unique, collaborative abilities in the mid-90s. As high school sweethearts and husband and wife, Catherine and Donald believe in true love and happily ever after.

The books of their paranormal romance series entitled The Turning Stone Chronicles are available on Amazon. They also have a short Christmas story, Kissing Santa, in a Christmas anthology titled Sizzle in the Snow: Soul Mate Christmas Collection, with seven other authors.

They are looking forward to many years of co-authoring and book sales, and a lifetime of happily-ever-after endings on the page and in real life.

You can connect with and follow C.D. Hersh at their website http://cdhersh.wordpress.com

Social Media Info:

Website: https://cdhersh.wordpress.com/

Soul Mate Publishing: http://smpauthors.wordpress.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cdhershauthor

Amazon Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/C.-D.-Hersh/e/B00DV5L7ZI

Twitter: https://twitter.com/AuthorCDHersh

Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/CDHersh

Soul Mate Publishing: http://www.soulmatepublishing.com/

 

 

A visit with Wendi Christner

WaterBearer-med copyWhat is your favorite part of writing?  The characters can make or break the best of stories, so I do love creating fully evolved people in my mind and putting them on the page. But for me it’s just as much fun to mold the sentences, manipulate the words, and figure out how all the pieces of the story weave together. That’s kind of weird, isn’t it? I do love the structural challenge, though. I guess it’s like making a quilt or putting together a jigsaw. There’s such a sense of accomplishment when you create something complex out of a bunch of simpler pieces.

 –What is your next project and when will it be released? Water Bearer is available now. It’s a bittersweet story of ever-lasting love and forgiveness set in a rural farming community much like the one I grew up in. Cassidy accidentally set a fire that killed her parents and has decided she needs to leave the ghosts behind. But her last summer with Jared, her best friend, changes everything.

–Where do you get the ideas for your stories? They come to me when my mind wanders. Sometimes I’m given a snippet of conversation first, and I start writing until I know who’s speaking. Then I follow their lead until they tell me their story. Sometimes I get what I call lightning strike moments where it all just kind of hits me out of nowhere and I run to my laptop to catch it before it’s gone. The most difficult books to write are the ones I start typing before the characters come to me on their own.

–Has your muse always known what genre you would write and be published in? My muse is a fickle little sprite, but I’ve come to understand at her heart she’s almost always speaking in my native Southern tongue. Over the years, the genre has become less important to me than capturing the characters and their truth. I read in a lot of different genres, and I write in a lot of different genres. But almost all of my books have a Southern setting.

–Did you always know you wanted to be a writer? Yes, I think I did. I didn’t always believe I could do it, though. My entire life, I’ve loved reading. I began to read when I was about a year old, and books were always my most prized possessions. When I began reading chapter books, I would often turn the last page with tears in my eyes and think “I wish I could do that.” Great books still bring those tears and that same wish.

–Describe the genre of this particular title, and is it the only genre you write in? Water Bearer is a coming of age love story. As I mentioned, I’ve become less focused on genre and more focused on the characters and their story. I write what tugs at me to be told. The characters in Water Bearer grabbed hold of my heart the moment I met them and still haven’t let go.

–Will you share some encouraging words for authors still struggling for that first contract? Keep improving your craft and believe in yourself. Writing success is like everything else worth achieving in life. You only fail when you stop trying.

–What’s next for you? Thank you for asking. Fetch Us Some Water is a gritty Southern novel that explores the depths of love and forgiveness possible between a mother and daughter. This book took me almost a decade to write. It’s rich and complex, and I’m excited to share it. Those familiar with my Writer’s Digest Short-Short Story Contest winner “Throwing Stones” will recognize the setting and some of the secondary characters. Release day is November 2, 2016, and it’s available for pre-order on Amazon now.

Thank you so much for having me here today. It’s been an honor.

Water Bearer Excerpt

Jared parked the tractor next to the barn and stepped down. He had a clear view of Cassidy as she hefted a rug over the clothesline behind Gima’s house. Her dark blond ponytail swung with the effort, and her long legs extended as she rose onto her toes. The shift of her body twisted his gut and sent an ache even lower. He couldn’t imagine a day when she wouldn’t be there, but that day was coming. And coming fast.

She whacked the rug with a broom, and a cloud of dust billowed out around her.

“When’s she leaving?” Clarence asked.

Jared glanced over his shoulder. He stood taller than his father. Two years ago they’d been the same height, but Clarence’s shoulders had started to bow. The lines in his face were carved too deep, and his hair had turned solid gray. He was too young to look as old as he did.

“End of August. Week after the Corn Dance.”

“Sooner the better.” Clarence slapped him on the shoulder and started toward the barn. “Just let her go.”

“I’m going to town,” Jared called after him.

“See if Lilith needs anything.”

Jared wiped the sweat from his brow and climbed in his truck. At the end of his driveway he turned right and pulled onto the narrow rutted path that led to Gima’s.

He heard Cassidy coughing before he made it to the back of the house. If she’d heard him drive up, she didn’t let it stop her from her chore. Dirt smudged her face, and the sweat that trickled from her temples had left trails in the grime.

A familiar heaviness settled on his heart at the same time his groin tightened. She was the only girl he’d ever seen who would look beautiful if she wrestled a pig on its own turf, and she didn’t have a clue how gorgeous she was or what she did to him.

“Hey, beautiful,” he said with a smirk.

Water Bearer Blurb

One last summer together forever changes the lives of best friends in a small Southern community. These unforgettable characters and their moving story linger long beyond the final page.

Amazon: https://goo.gl/4863fA

WendiChristnerWendi Christner Bio

Wendi Christner is the author of Writer’s Digest Short-Short Story Competition winner “Throwing Stones,” a fairy self-help book, and several novels written under various pseudonyms. Her gritty, emotional stories tend to have a Southern voice born of her roots in the Florida panhandle. She currently lives in Tampa with her husband, son, and their fur family.

www.WendiChristner.com

www.facebook.com/WendiChristnerAuthor

Twitter/Instagram @WendiDarlin

Rafflecopter Giveaway – $25 Amazon Giftcard
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An Excerpt from Programmed to Please by Jenna Ives

ProgrammedRevision (2)Thanks for hosting me today, Cynthia!

I write futuristic romances as well as fairy tales with a contemporary twist. I particularly enjoy dropping my two main characters into an impossible situation, and then watching the sparks fly as they try to resist falling in love!

That’s what happens in the first book of my new series, The Tau Cetus Chronicles, which is called Programmed To Please.

Here’s the blurb:

Very human Tau Cetus police agent Jai Turner goes undercover as a Beautiful Dolls robot to bring down the planet’s most notorious arms dealer, Marque Callex.

 Marque Callex only accepts an invitation from Beautiful Dolls because with his deadly line of work – and the dangerous secrets he’s keeping – he can’t afford to let a real woman into his life.

 But neither Jai nor Marque are what they seem, and their week together has consequences neither expect.

Programmed To Please is a HOLT Medallion merit award-winner.

Here’s an excerpt:

“Turner, I’m sending you undercover as a Beautiful Dolls robot.”

Police agent Jai Turner stared at her boss, Commander Talis Rainey, convinced she couldn’t have heard him right. “Sir?”

Rainey leaned forward and pushed a button on his desk. “Send in Mr. Carron.”

A minute later, a short man stood in the doorway.

“This is Anson Carron. Creator of Beautiful Dolls.”

Carron’s eyes had locked on Jai, and were scanning her up and down in a way that felt decidedly intimate despite the generic, navy blue one-piece uniform everyone on the Tau Cetus police force wore.

“Yes,” he murmured. “I suppose I can work with this.”

“This,” Rainey said hotly, “is Jai Turner, one of my best agents. Now sit. Both of you.”

The two took the chairs arrayed around Rainey’s desk. Jai crossed her arms and legs defensively.

Rainey ran a hand through his grey-black hair. “I have one thing to say to you, Turner. Marque Callex.”

The infamous name had Jai leaning forward in her chair, now eagerly waiting for Rainey’s next words.

“You know how long we’ve been trying to get this guy. We may now have a chance, albeit by a very unconventional route.” Rainey nodded toward their guest. “A month ago, Mr. Carron ran afoul of the law. In an effort to save his neck – and his very lucrative business – he suggested a unique proposal in return for us not pursuing charges against him.”

“What kind of proposal?” Jai asked.

“He agreed to send an… invitation… to Marque Callex, in the guise of offering ‘a select number of high-powered businessmen’ the chance to sample the latest model of Beautiful Doll in exchange for their feedback on the product. In reality, Callex was the only person to get this invitation.”

Jai’s mouth set in a disgusted line. “And he accepted.”

“He did. In this ‘latest model,’ clients are able to customize their girl. Callex filled out the form, and now all we have to do is fulfill his requirements. With you.”

Jai’s eyes went wide. “You want me to impersonate a sexbot?”

“He’s requested certain specifics,” Anson Carron said. “Blonde hair. Blue eyes. Lean, athletic build.”

“Well, that rules me out. I’m brown-haired and brown-eyed.”

“You fit the most important characteristic: athletic build,” her boss pointed out. “We can’t fake that, but we can correct the other things with hair dye and contact lenses.”

Jai scowled. There was absolutely no way she was going to volunteer for this. Not even to bring down a man they’d long suspected of weapons smuggling. Besides, she could never pass for a robot. She had a heartbeat!

Rainey sighed into the silence. “Do I really need to play the Joran Breaux card with you?”

Joran was the much more personal reason they were after Marque Callex. Joran had been sent to infiltrate Callex Industries from the inside, only to turn up dead three weeks later.

“This may be our best chance to get to Callex. But if you’re not up to it, Turner, I’ll find another female agent who’s more committed to her job.”

Crap. Now Rainey was doubting Jai’s dedication to the force. She considered her options. As in, none. “I’ll do it. If this is our best – and possibly only – chance to get to Callex, then I’m in.”

If Programmed To Please sounds like an interesting read to you, here are some buy links:

Amazon

Barnes & Noble

iBooks

KOBO

Smashwords

About me: I am a ‘hybrid author’ both traditionally and self-published. I write for several publishers under a variety of names, but mainly it’s to protect my poor mother (who used to read sweet Harlequin novels) from discovering how sexy modern romances have become. And I DO write sexy…

I love to connect with readers and other authors! Hit me up one of these ways: website: www.jennaives.com;  email: jenna@jennaives.com; Twitter @JennaIvesAuthor; or on Facebook or Goodreads!

Thanks so much to Cynthia for hosting me today!

Jenna

 

 

Visiting with Ella Quinn

Cynthia, thank you so much for having me back on your blog! It’s a pleasure being here.

It’s my pleasure, Ella ~~ Cynthia

When a Marquis Chooses a BrideTell us about your current series: The Worthingtons begins with eleven children, including two eighteen year olds who are having their first Season and two Great Danes. In the first book, Three Weeks to Wed, Grace and Matt Worthington marry. They each have guardianship of their brothers and sisters, so we have a blended family of sorts.

 What inspired your latest book? At the end of Three Weeks to Wed, one of Worthington’s cousins, Dominic, Marquis of Merton shows up. He’s very handsome, but full of himself, or as a Regency person would say, puffed up in his own consequence. He really had to be taken down a few notches. Dotty Stern, a life-long friend of Charlotte, Grace’s sister, was raised by an egalitarian father and seemed to be just the person to do it.

What is your next project and when will it be released? The next book is about the Dowager Lady Worthington. It’s a novella and will release sometime in March. However, I’m also working on a self-published novella series called The Trevors. That book, It Takes a Hero, will release in September in a boxed set.

How has your experience with self-publishing been? I can’t say horrible because I have not even done any of the heavy lifting, but I still don’t like it. I wish, for example, that I’d pitched the novella series to my publisher. I really love being traditionally published.

Tell us about your hero.  Give us one of his strengths and one of his weaknesses. Dom’s strength is loyalty, to his family and country. His weakness is his inability to stretch and see beyond what his uncle taught him. But we’re working on that.

Tell us about your heroine.  Give us one of her strengths and one of her weaknesses. Dotty’s strength is her compassion. She is determined to cure as many ills of the world as she can. Her weakness is that she will barge into a situation without thinking of all the consequences.

Has your muse always known what genre you would write and be published in? Ever since she came to live with me, she has proven to be much smarter than I am. She absolutely knew that I need to write Regencies instead of my journey to buying boat.

Did you have several manuscripts finished before you sold? If so, did you send them out yourself? When I started out a friend, who’d worked for a publisher in Europe, told me to write three books, so I did. That worked out very well as my editor was able to read all three books in the series when he made the offer.

When A Marquis Chooses A Bride (The Worthingtons, Book 2)

Thanks to their large extended family and unconventional courtship, the Worthingtons have seen their share of scandal and excitement. But nothing has prepared them for this…

The Dowager Lady Worthington isn’t quite sure what to make of country-girl Dorothea Stern. As the granddaughter of the Duke of Bristol, Dotty is schooled in the ways and means of the nobility. But her sharp wit and outspoken nature has everyone in a tizzy. Especially their cousin, Dominic, the Marquis of Merton.
Prematurely stuffy, Dom was raised by his cheerless uncle to be wary of a host of things, including innovation, waltzing, and most perilous of all: true love. Still, there’s something about Dotty, beyond her beauty, that Dom cannot resist. But the odds are against him if he intends to win her as his bride. Will he choose loyalty to his family—or risk everything for the one woman he believes is his perfect match…

Purchase Links:

Amazon https://goo.gl/RbNQLh

Barnes & Noble http://goo.gl/NSuQtM

Kobo https://goo.gl/BxZfpW

GooglePlay https://goo.gl/Jm9pHm

Books-A-Million http://goo.gl/W4YauS

Powell’s http://goo.gl/Abnlk8

iBooks https://goo.gl/2OfDsd

Ella QuinnElla Quinn Bio

Bestselling author Ella Quinn’s studies and other jobs have always been on the serious side. Reading historical romances, especially Regencies, were her escape. Eventually her love of historical novels led her to start writing them. She has just finished her first series, The Marriage Game, and her new series will start in April 2016.

She is married to her wonderful husband of over thirty years. They have a son and granddaughter, one cat and a dog. After living in the South Pacific, Central America, North Africa, England and Europe, she and her husband decided to make their dreams come true and are now living on a sailboat cruising the Caribbean and North America.

She loves having readers connect with her.

Website: www.ellaquinnauthor.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/EllaQuinnAuthor

Twitter www.twitter.com/ellaquinnauthor

Blog http://ellaquinnauthor.wordpresscom

 

Rafflecopter Giveaway – 5 Autographed print copies of When A Marquis Chooses A Bride

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An Interview with Jan Scarbrough

Liz-200-300How did you get started writing?

I went to college to become an English teacher, because I liked to read and write thanks to a ninth grade teacher. I was afraid of actually writing a novel, afraid of failure, until I was nearing forty and almost died because of an illness. That’s when I decided I’d better start making my dream happen, because I might not be given another chance.

What genre(s) do you write in and why?

I have written in three genres. Most of my books are contemporary romance. Why? It doesn’t require as much research. Oh, sure, contemporaries require some—like finding out about Professional Bull Riders or a Montana dude ranch—but on the whole they are easier to write. I have written one medieval romance called My Lord Raven. It is on vacation now because I received my rights back from a small publisher. My goal is to refresh and self-publish it early in 2017. Finally, I’ve written two Gothic romances with historical flashbacks and paranormal elements. I enjoyed reading Gothics as a teenager, and this genre feels natural to me. Timeless and Tangled Memories are two of my favorite books.

Tell us about your current series.

My most popular series is called the Montana McKennas with romance author Maddie James. Over time we developed the idea of a Montana family complete with a patriarch, James, and his second wife, Liz. I was tasked with writing the first book about stepbrother Brody, a Professional Bull Rider. Then Maddie wrote about James’ children—Callie and Parker—by his first wife. The end of the series was to be the story of Mercer, James and Liz’s daughter together. But then I decided to give Liz her own story.

The books are sweet to sexy:

  • The Montana McKennas: Prequel, FREE, by Jan Scarbrough and Maddie James
  • Brody, by Jan Scarbrough
  • Callie, by Maddie James
  • Parker, by Maddie James
  • Mercer, by Jan Scarbrough
  • Liz, by Jan Scarbrough

 

What inspired your latest book?

The character of Liz in the Montana McKennas series was left without a happily-ever-after ending. I thought she needed one. Besides, I enjoy writing about older heroines. Liz at the time of the story is fifty-five.

How has your experience with self-publishing been?

Frankly, I enjoy the control of self-publishing. I pay for a nice cover and a good edit. Then my husband formats and uploads the books for me. You can’t beat it! I was tired of trying to please editors at traditionally publishing houses. When I went to a small press (my Bluegrass Reunions series) I could write what I wanted, but still was without control over pricing and promotion.

What do you have planned for the future?

I am working on a series called Bluegrass Homecoming, set in my home state of Kentucky. And as mentioned earlier, I plan to re-issue My Lord Raven in 2017. I just vacationed in Montana. Who knows? A brand new Montana series may be coming also in 2017.

Do you have any words of inspiration for aspiring authors?

Write. Finish the book. Write some more. I believe my biggest growth as a writer came when I worked with the editors of the small press. The more I worked with the professionals, the more I learned. Also, don’t be afraid to re-write. Your words are not golden. You can always do better.

Are you a member of any writing organizations and, if so, have they helped

Several years ago, I sold two small category books to Kensington, a New York publisher. Because of those sales, I was able at that time to join Novelist, Inc., the professional network for career novelists. Their conferences are informal and informative. This group was one of the first to embrace self-publishing and feature it at their conferences. They keep me up-to-date in the field of publishing.

JanCRW200-300Short Bio

Jan Scarbrough is the author of the popular Bluegrass Reunion series, writing heartwarming contemporary romances about family and second chances, and if the plot allows—horses. Living in the horse country of Kentucky makes it easy for Jan to add small town, Southern charm to her books, and the excitement of a horse race or a competitive horse show. A member of Novelist, Inc., Jan has published with Kensington, Five Star, ImaJinn Books, Resplendence Publishing and Turquoise Morning Press.

Visit Jan at http://www.janscarbrough.com

Sign up for Jan’s newsletter: http://www.janscarbrough.com/contact/

You can also follow Jan on Twitter @romancerider

Amazon author page: https://www.amazon.com/author/janscarbrough

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/Jan_Scarbrough

Buy Links for Liz: The Montana McKennas

Nook: http://bit.ly/Liz_Nook

Amazon: http://bit.ly/Liz_Amazon

Kobo: http://bit.ly/Liz_Kobo

iBooks: http://bit.ly/Liz_iBooks

Excerpt – first 500 or so words

Prologue

Malibu, California

Charles Martin Kingston pulled off the main road into the parking space beside his half-brother’s twenty-five million dollar beach house. Fronted by the Pacific Ocean with views of the mountains beyond the highway, the six-thousand-square-foot luxury home had been his brother’s peace offering to his second wife.

Even six bedrooms, seven baths, a chef’s kitchen, infinity pool, and spa hadn’t worked. The ungrateful bitch had divorced Dalton Kingston anyway, throwing his baby brother into the deepest, darkest depression Chaz had yet seen. Women.

His own track record wasn’t much better. He’d married once and divorced once, vowing never to get tied up with a crazy woman like Adrianne again. From the first, he should have been wary of her because she came with baggage from one failed marriage—twin daughters Alena and Amalee. God, he still couldn’t tell those girls apart, even though they’d turned twenty-one and he’d known them for fifteen years.

The only good to come of his marriage was his daughter Ashleigh. Fifteen—going on forty—she was the light of his life. But she was her mother’s daughter more than his. Hooked on glamor and fashion, she knew every pop trend that, of course, she tweeted, blogged, or whatever kids today did to call attention to themselves. Chaz had kept her out of her mother’s reality TV show so far, but it was getting harder to do.

Alena, Amalee, and Adrianne Wade (she’d taken back her first husband’s name) were big stars in the celebrity world. Famous for being famous. No real talent except for making themselves the objects of curiosity for paparazzi and gossip magazines. Chaz didn’t want that for his daughter.

That’s why he needed to see Ashleigh more often. Make time. Not skip his visitation. But it was all so complicated. His life. His job. This business he was in, trying to make it in the ruthlessly competitive world of Hollywood. He was constantly trying to keep ahead of the sharks that would eat him alive if he didn’t remain current. Find the next trend two years before others knew it existed. Be the first with the best script. The best ideas.

Chaz sat a moment in front of his brother’s dual garage entrances. He expelled a breath, opened the car door, and stepped out onto the pavement. California sunshine struck him with its familiar fierceness. He squinted into the glare, wishing he’d brought his sunglasses. The roar of the ocean almost drowned out the rumble of cars driving past the beachfront house.

Except for Ashleigh, Dalton Kingston was his only family. Ten years his junior, Chaz had always felt close to his brother. But even that closeness had frayed lately.

Chaz worried about him. About the anger and despondency that ate away at his brother’s life. About the fact that he hadn’t answered his cell phone in two days.

Why did it seem as if he’d lost control of everything? If he wasn’t careful, he’d end up as miserable as his brother.

A Visit with Catherine Chant

NSTS-Cover-400x600What genre(s) do you write in and why?

I currently write young adult time travel. I write time travel because I fell in love with Outlander when I first read it back 1991, and I’ve always been fascinated by images of the past. I would love to be able to go back in time to look around, not necessarily live there, but see what things were like and how things have changed. I’d love to visit my own past just to remind myself about things that happened, now that those memories are fading with age.

 I think I write young adult because it’s a time in my life I remember quite fondly. The characters and situations seem to come naturally to me. I loved high school much more than college. Maybe writing about it is my way of going back in time for a little while.

Tell us about your current series.

My currently series is the Soul Mates series. It’s what I call a rock ‘n’ roll time travel series. The first book, WISHING YOU WERE HERE, is set in 1957 and centers around a teen idol with a meteoric rise to fame similar to Elvis.

The second book, NOTHING STAYS THE SAME, is set in 1973 and centers around a made-for-TV pop band like The Monkees. A possible third book in the series (I’m still toying with the idea for it right now) would probably be set in 1988 and center around a British heavy metal band.

What is your least favorite part of writing?

Probably the rough draft. I hate the blank page. It feels so intimidating. That said, I love during the rough draft phase when I’m surprised by a new plot point I hadn’t thought of when I first sat down to write the story.

What is your favorite part of writing?

loved editing and revision. I find this much easier than writing the rough draft. I love playing with words and rearranging scenes so that everything flows.

Do you have critique partners?

Yes, I have two. Women’s fiction author Kathleen Paterka has been my critique partner for about 12 years. We write different genres, but I think it’s good to have multiple perspectives on your writing. My second critique partner is author Charlotte Copper who also writes young adult romance. We just met this past year. I have several writer friends I exchange chapters with for feedback as well. They usually don’t go over the whole book, but read the first few chapters and let me know if I’m on the right track.

What is your favorite dessert/food?

I love whipped cream, so anything that incorporates that into the dish is winner. Things like ice cream, cheesecake, or layer cakes with whipped cream frosting…yum! I love pretty much all desserts. As long as it doesn’t have raisins, I’ll probably eat it.

How likely are people you meet to end up in your next book?

You’ll all be relieved to know the answer is “Not very.” 🙂

I like to use names of friends as secret nods of them in my books, either as a secondary character or the name of a business, but none of the characters in my books are based on real people. They might be inspired by real people, like how Eddie Cochran was the inspiration behind WISHING YOU WERE HERE, and The Monkees are part of the inspiration behind the made-for-TV band in NOTHING STAYS THE SAME, but the characters themselves are completely fictional.

So, although I own a mug that says if you anger the writer I’ll put you in a book and kill you, I haven’t done that yet. 🙂

What genres are you drawn to as a reader?

My favorite genre is mystery/suspense. I never miss a Harlan Coben novel or ones from Brenda Novak. Some of my other favorite suspense authors are Lisa Scottoline, Diane Chamberlain and Laura Lippman.

Do you prefer to read in the same genres you write in or do you avoid reading that genre? Why?

I actually read across all genres. I like to expose myself to as many different types of stories as possible to expand my horizons, so to speak. I think you can learn a lot from reading how different stories come together. The only genre I don’t read is high fantasy. I like my stories based on a world I’m already familiar with, if possible.

Do you have any words of inspiration for aspiring authors?

Just write. Write whatever you want. Don’t worry about what’s popular now. Trends come and go and come around gain. Don’t overthink the “rules,” either. Write from your heart. Write the book you want to read and your passion for the story will shine through. Don’t worry about mistakes. You can always fix that in revisions.

 

Jpeg

Jpeg

AUTHOR BIO

Award-winning author Catherine Chant is an active member of Romance Writers of America and a Golden Heart® finalist. She writes rock ‘n’ roll romantic fiction and stories with paranormal twists for young adults. You can find out more by visiting her website at http://www.CatherineChant.com or connect with her via social media:

Twitter @Catherine_Chant

Facebook CatherineChantNovels

Instagram Catherine_Chant

ABOUT THE BOOK

NOTHING STAYS THE SAME, the Soul Mates series

Young Adult Time Travel Romance

Available from Amazon.com

https://amzn.com/B01IASDPV4

One choice changes everything…

In 1973, The Beat Detectors are the hottest TV pop band to hit the airwaves since The Monkees, thanks to the appealing vocals of rising teen idol Ronnie Basford. But behind the scenes, not everything is rainbows and unicorns. Ronnie realizes much too late that one bad decision can ruin your whole life.

Forty years later, Ronnie is dead from an apparent suicide and his sixteen-year-old son Brennan wants answers. All his life Brennan’s never seen his father happy and needs to understand how it all went so wrong. When he finds himself dropped back in time, to the set of his father’s hit TV show and into the midst of a disintegrating band, he’s determined to redirect the course of his father’s life and create the happy ending Ronnie deserved.

Soccer star Leah Reinard has been crushing on Brennan Basford for ages. When they end up at the same summer job, she thinks the fates have finally aligned in her favor. That is, until Brennan suddenly disappears from existence. One day he’s there, the next day, he’s gone. And no one but Leah even remembers him.

Brennan’s attempts to save his father are inadvertently wreaking havoc with the present day. Can Leah find Brennan in time to stop him from ruining both their futures?

BRIEF EXCERPT (500 words) from NOTHING STAYS THE SAME

 The Beat Detectors. His father’s biggest success and, Brennan guessed, his biggest regret because he never spoke about it with any sense of pride or joy. Not the way his mother talked about her days as Britain’s top child star.

“What happened, Dad?”

He flipped through the pages of the first notebook. It would take him a while to finish, and he wanted to, but right now his head ached.

His heart ached, too. Would this horrible feeling ever go away?

He rubbed his eyes and spotted his father’s watch under a pile of loose papers in the corner of the desk. He dragged it across the surface by his fingertips, his pulse beating twice for every tick of the second hand. His father had always worn this watch. So why was it here?

Because he’d known he wasn’t coming back?

Something squeezed inside Brennan’s chest and he ground the heels of his hands into his eye sockets to try to make the thought go away. He wanted to believe it was an accident. Why couldn’t it be an accident?

“Why did you do it, Dad? Why?” The rage built up inside again, ready to explode. “WHY?”

Brennan’s foot shot out and connected with the open drawer that had held the notebooks. An awful bang reverberated through the whole desk. Then a different sound, one of metal on metal, rang up from the drawer. He peered down into the space.

A panel at the back had fallen forward. Not like a secret compartment or anything, but a flimsy divider for folders. He went to push it into place, but it wouldn’t go all the way back. He tilted the divider forward. Behind the piece of metal sat a thin box standing on its end.

As he lifted it out, the cover slipped off, revealing a small reel-to-reel tape. The tape didn’t have a label on it, but on the underside of the cover, between two split corners, he spotted something written in faded pencil.

He held the cover to the light.

“Starman” it said in block letters. Then below that, the words “Orbit of Your Love” and a date, but he could only make out the year. 1973. This wasn’t any Beat Detectors tune he’d ever heard of, or a Ronnie Basford single; although with a corny title like that, it was probably an outtake from his solo album.

He set the tape aside, tried to go back to the notebooks and forget the pain throbbing behind his eyes, but the tape sat on the desk, teasing his peripheral vision. Something about it nagged at him.

“Fine,” he finally said to the empty room, “I’ll listen to it. Is that what you want?”

No answer, of course. Did he really just say something out loud as if his father could hear him?

“I’m going crazy,” he muttered, but he couldn’t ignore the sudden feeling of urgency that came over him. He needed to know what was on this tape.

 

An Interview with Lily Danes

SofHP.Ebook400x600What genre(s) do you write in and why?

I write sexy contemporary romance. Technically, Lost Coast Harbor is romantic suspense/mystery, but that was an accident. I blame my co-conspirator Eve Kincaid, since she has a knack for crafting great mysteries. Me, I’m more interested in how quickly my characters can kiss. So while I’m having a great time writing the Lost Coast Harbor series, I definitely think of myself more as a contemporary romance author first and foremost.

Tell us about your current series.

Lost Coast Harbor is a small town on the rugged Northern California coast, but this isn’t a sweet small-town romance series. Eve and I are both fans of old noir films, and that was a huge influence when we crafted our town. It’s a place full of secrets, and—of course—a lot of gorgeous single men. We created the world together and take turns writing the books. I write the odd-numbered ones while Eve handles the even ones.

Give us an elevator pitch for your book.

A self-made millionaire’s homecoming is complicated when he’s forced to work with his evil ex-wife, the woman who walked away without a word.

What is your next project and when will it be released?

Sins of Her Past, Lost Coast Harbor #5, comes out August 30. After that, I’m hopping right into another shared world series with Camp Firefly Falls. It’s set at an adult summer camp, with a new book released every two weeks this summer, each one by a different fabulous author. One Last Fling comes out September 23.

What is your writing routine like?

 

Four words: turn off the internet. I usually put my butt in the chair around 2pm and use Freedom to block access for 1-2 hours at a time. Repeat until I’ve hit the daily word count (between 2000-2500 word a day, five days a week). If I’m being less disciplined, I’ll write in sprints while chatting or checking social media, but I’m a lot less efficient that way.

 

How likely are people you meet to end up in your next book?

Zero chance. Characters have always been the easiest part of the writing process for me. They tend to show up fully formed and wonder why I don’t have a plot for them. It’s my favorite part of the process, bringing my imaginary friends to life on the page.

What are you currently working on?

I’m starting my first solo series this month. It’s still early enough in the process that I don’t want to talk about it too much—let’s not scare the ideas off!—but it will be a hot contemporary romance. It should find its way into the world early next year.

How far do you plan ahead?

Plan? About twelve months out. How well do I stick to that plan…um. Barring any surprises, I’m good for the first six months, which is somewhere between 2-3 books. After that, I usually need to make some adjustments to the plan based on reader response, new opportunities, and my mood. I have a lovely year-long chart that color codes my writing and editing schedule, and the entire thing is written in erasable ink.

Having achieved your goal to be a published author, what is the most rewarding thing?

 

I love love love hearing from readers about characters that hit them just right or a relationship that made them do the happy romance sigh. There’s something magical about knowing other people responded the way I hoped they would while writing it.

 

 

 

Excerpt

“Why do you have a movie theater in your office building?” Her voice was steady. Good.

“Because sometimes you need to take a break in the middle of the day and watch Batman.”

She snorted. “You always were a DC fanboy.”

There was a tiny hitch in the conversation, a moment when she knew they remembered the same thing. A drunken debate at two in the morning about the relative merits of DC versus Marvel.

Marcus broke the silence first. “You haven’t seen the error of your ways yet?”

“Do we really need to talk about DC’s New 52?”

Marcus opened his mouth to protest, then gave up. Smart boy. The DC universe reboot was a gateway to another hours-long debate that she would, without doubt, win.

“I liked the new Batgirl,” she admitted. One should be gracious in victory, even if it was only presumed.

“If she gets her own movie, we can screen it here.” Marcus gestured inside. “You know how it is at tech companies. People work too hard. They get obsessed with a project. You need to let them blow off steam and relax. That goes double in a small town like this.”

Bree nodded, pretending she had any idea what he was talking about. After graduation, she hadn’t been capable of interviewing at a tech company, let alone working at one.

“You want a tour?”

Bree shook her head. “It’s not necessary. Let’s get to work.”

He led her up the wide staircase next to the reception desk. He was two steps above her, giving her a perfect view of the way his thigh muscles bunched and released under the expensive fabric. Her skin prickled in awareness, and she glanced down, focusing on her combat boots as they took one step after another. She should absolutely, under no circumstances, be thinking of Marcus’s thighs.

She made a mental note to not accept jobs when she’d seen her boss naked.

 

 

BIO

Lily Danes is a native Californian who loves cold weather, snow, and rain. A recovering city girl, she now lives in the Sierra Nevadas, where she gardens, knits, herds cats, and plans DIY projects she’s too lazy to complete. She has few practical skills and would be absolutely useless in the zombie apocalypse.

 

Learn more and sign up for the newsletter at lilydanes.com.

 

 

BUY LINKS

Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Sins-Past-Lost-Coast-Harbor-ebook/dp/B01KP2SY96